| Support Type: | Cotton Cloth |
| Paint Type: | Gouache |
| Current Location: | The Metropolitan Museum of Art |
| Location History: | was created Akbar\'s imperial workshop in North India, then was collected by British painter and collecter Howard Hodgkin |
The painting Khwaja Umar saved from Pursuers is one of the dramatic folios from the Mughal Hamzanama, which was produced during the reign of Akbar in the late 16th century. It is visually intense, crowded with movement, and filled with narrative tension. Like many Hamzanama paintings, it was created not merely as decoration, but as part of an oral storytelling tradition where heroic adventures were narrated before an audience. The entire painting is structured diagonally and vertically rather than symmetrically. The viewers' eyes move upward through rocky cliffs, violent action scenes, fleeing figures, and supernatural elements. Unlike later Mughal paintings that became more refined and balanced, this artwork feels energetic, chaotic, and theatrical. The scene is packed tightly with riders, warriors, weapons, rocks, animals, clouds, and spiritual imagery. The central story depicts Khwaja Umar escaping from enemies who are pursuing him through a dangerous mountainous landscape. Art historians often discuss this painting because of visible European artistic influence entering Mughal art during Akbar's reign. This work is important because it stands at a transition point like the Persian miniature traditions are still visible, but Mughal naturalism, movement, and narrative drama are beginning to emerge. The painting therefore represents the formation of a uniquely Mughal visual identity under Akbar's imperial atelier.
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